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Guest post: "The truth about the motherhood penalty and how to fix it"

130 replies

JuliaMumsnet · 15/03/2021 12:11

Founder of Pregnant Then Screwed Joeli Brearley on her new book about fixing the motherhood penalty:

"Since I launched Pregnant Then Screwed I have been astounded by the number of women who blame themselves when they are pushed out of their jobs because they became mothers. It’s as if they’re an extraordinary inconvenience to practically everybody; a walking, talking burden to business owners that should be grateful for whatever work they can get. They are treated as if it isn’t a baby they have given birth to but rather their own competence, and they believe it. So many mothers instinctively believe this lie, because that is the narrative we are subtly drip-fed. Sometimes it’s not that subtle, or that ‘drippy’ - like when Boris Johnson wrote an article in 2006 which stated that the children of working mothers are more likely to mug you, or when we discover that a third of employers believe that new mothers are generally less interested in career progression. One in three Brits think that mothers of children under the age of five shouldn’t be working, and only 7% think it’s okay for them to work full-time. The message is that mothers should shut up moaning about workplace discrimination because their real job is at home; why on earth should their employer make the workplace work for parents? After all, it was your choice to have a baby so you will just have to live with the consequences.

However, we don’t hear the same thing said about dads. I have never seen anyone suggest that the children of working fathers are more likely to mug you, and I imagine 100% of Brits think that it’s totally acceptable for a dad to be working full-time. In fact, not working full-time is probably seen as a dereliction of their duty. The fact is that in the majority of families, both parents need to work so that they can afford to pay their bills. In 2015–2016, 43% of children living with one working parent and one non-working parent were in relative income poverty, compared with 11% of children in two-earner households. It is a financial necessity for most mothers to work, yet we are surrounded by people telling us to get back to our real job of looking after the kids.

This narrative gives employers a get out of jail free card when it comes to treating women in the workplace differently. At Pregnant Then Screwed, we heard from a woman whose employer forced her to take a shot of vodka every morning to prove she wasn’t pregnant; a mother who returned from maternity leave to find that there was no record of her even existing and that someone else was doing her job; and a woman who informed her boss that she was pregnant only to be asked who the father was and whether she had considered an abortion. We heard from a woman on maternity leave who received an email sent to her by mistake which said ‘just sack her, she won’t cause a fuss, she’ll be too exhausted from caring for a newborn’, in addition to hearing from a woman who announced her pregnancy and from that point was bullied and harassed so viciously by her colleagues, that she went into labour prematurely. When she was in the neonatal clinic with her baby, who could have died, her boss called her and made her redundant.

This bias towards working mothers isn’t the only barrier women face when trying to have children and a career. Our wildly expensive childcare system, a severe lack of flexible working, a parental leave system that doesn’t encourage dads to take time out to care for their children, and the fact that women do 60% more of the cooking, cleaning and childcare (even when they earn the most money) means that many mums either find themselves being dragged back to the kitchen sink, or working in a role that is well below their pay and skill level.

The pandemic has shone a magnifying glass on many of these issues. Pregnant women and mothers are sidelined and ignored to the detriment of families and the economy. Well, it’s time for change, and change is possible - I’ve written a book about it; a book that will help you navigate all of these problems should they leap up and bite you on the bum, whilst also giving you the knowledge you need to take on this battle in your own surroundings. A book that will give you every response you need when some nit-wit says: ‘but it was your choice to have a child.’ A book that will make you realise that you are not a burden, you are a talented, dedicated, multi-tasking ninja, and you deserve to be treated with respect."

EDIT: Joeli will be coming back to the thread on Wednesday at 1pm to answer your questions.

Joeli Brearly is the founder of Pregnant Then Screwed. Her book Pregnant Then Screwed: The Truth About the Motherhood Penalty and How to Fix It is out now. You can find her on twitter @Joeli_Brearley.

Guest post: "The truth about the motherhood penalty and how to fix it"
OP posts:
MagentaZebras · 24/03/2021 13:55

@JoeliBrearleyGuestPost I agree. I wish women would put each other first and vote for them en masse.

JoeliBrearleyGuestPost · 24/03/2021 14:00

@Januaryblue2020

Yeah it's crap isn't it. I was forced out of my job thanks to a complex fixed term contract situ that meant they could (just about) legally not renew my contract, even though my job was subsequently advertised. It's often not a straightforward case of being pregnant = being sacked. Theres plenty of women in unsecure work that just kind of 'disappears' once they have a baby. And sadly it's legal
@Januaryblue2020 Absolutely - I also look at this in the book. But, just to be clear, it isn't legal for your work to just 'disappear' when you're pregnant or have a child. No matter what kind of contract you are on, if you suddenly stop getting work due to pregnancy then you have a case for discrimination. Though, unfortunately, if you are on a zero hours contract you have no legal right to return to your job after maternity leave which is a massive issue for women.
JoeliBrearleyGuestPost · 24/03/2021 14:02

@1Morewineplease

Maybe, society should embrace women who are pregnant or who have just given birth. Let's be brutally honest, men can't. Maybe we should try to understand how a local baker feels when their star baker goes on mat leave and the baker, who earns not too much , has to pay mat leave but still has to pay for someone else to step in to provide the same service. Maybe women should be granted extensive leave , say three to five years , paid for by the state , and not by struggling businesses, I really think society needs a shake up on loads of issues.
@1Morewineplease employers do not pay maternity leave - the Government does. A small company reclaims the cost of maternity leave, they actually claim 103% so more than they pay.
JoeliBrearleyGuestPost · 24/03/2021 14:06

@PlanDeRaccordement

So is this a book advert? Where is the promised solution?

Mine is that I had the DCs and was off work only 12weeks per child. Don’t stop full time work. Don’t pretend you can disappear for months on end and it not affect your lifetime earnings.

The same motherhood penalty has happened to the SAHDs I know of. So it is really a SAHP penalty in my opinion.

@PlanDeRaccordement the point of the post is about pernicious gender stereotypes and how they impact earnings. Women who have kids and stay in work encounter pay cuts and demotions. Men get pay rises and promotions. But also, our legislation is set up to ensure it is women who take time out to care for their children in those early days, rather than men. There are a variety of solutions detailed in the book - if the Government prioritised gender equality there are many ways to fix this issue.
MagentaZebras · 24/03/2021 14:18

The penalty is not just for parents who do not work.

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